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Shock Cooling and Breakout Emission for Optical Flares Associated with Gravitational-wave Events

Hiromichi TagawaShanghai Astronomical Observatory, Shanghai, 200030, People's Republic of China; [email protected]Shigeo S. KimuraAstronomical Institute, Graduate School of Science, Tohoku University, Aoba, Sendai 980-8578, JapanZoltán HaimanDepartment of Astronomy, Columbia University, 550 W. 120th St., New York, NY 10027, USARosalba PernaCenter for Computational Astrophysics, Flatiron Institute, New York, NY 10010, USAI. BartosDepartment of Physics, University of Florida, P.O. Box 118440, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA
2024en
ABI

Аннотация

Abstract The astrophysical origin of stellar-mass black hole (BH) mergers discovered through gravitational waves (GWs) is widely debated. Mergers in the disks of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) represent promising environments for at least a fraction of these events, with possible observational clues in the GW data. An additional clue to unveil AGN merger environments is provided by possible electromagnetic emission from postmerger accreting BHs. Associated with BH mergers in AGN disks, emission from shocks emerging around jets launched by accreting merger remnants is expected. Here we compute the properties of the emission produced during breakout and the subsequent adiabatic expansion phase of the shocks, and we then apply this model to optical flares suggested to be possibly associated with GW events. We find that the majority of the reported flares can be explained by breakout and shock cooling emission. If the optical flares are produced by shock cooling emission, they would display moderate color evolution, possibly color variations among different events, and a positive correlation between delay time and flare duration and would be preceded by breakout emission in X-rays. If the breakout emission dominates the observed lightcurve, we predict the color to be distributed in a narrow range in the optical band and the delay time from GW to electromagnetic emission to be longer than ∼2 days. Hence, further explorations of delay time distributions, flare color evolution, and associated X-ray emission will be useful to test the proposed emission model for the observed flares.

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